Communication

Organizers

Agenda

The day will feature informal demos, presentations and discussions about cool Eclipse projects, ranging from research prototypes to fully-featured open-source and commercial offerings.

Each presentation should be 15 minutes + 5 minutes of questions, doing the transition with next presentation. If you want to make something shorter, then we'll plan quickies (5 minutes). This tentative agenda is subject to change depending on the proposed talks.

14h - 14h15: Welcome, by Adrian Mos

14h20 - 14h35: What's hot in Juno? , by Aurelien Pupier + ? What is new in the Juno release

GEF SVG export in JWT, a newcomer’s rocky ride to Eclipse , by Yoann Rodière SVG export was a long standing open bug in JWT. There was a good reason, here are a few lessons learned about doing things the Eclipse way.

From scratch to a maintainable & automated build in 5 minutes with Tycho, by Mickael Istria Tycho is a revolution in the build, continuous integration, continuous improvement world. Getting started is just a matter of minutes

19h - ... Unconference in a bar of the center of Grenoble (announced during the DemoCamp)

Proposed talks

Submission and deadline

You can submit simply by adding a paragraph there (please respect follow title conventions so we can easy use the page outline). We are looking for talks that shows:

Cool stuff in Eclipse (Eclipse insight)

Cool stuff with Eclipse (how you use Eclipse)

Cool stuff for Eclipse (what plugins you develop)

All technologies/projects/organizations/... are good for a presentation, while it relates to Eclipse.

What's hot in Juno?

By: Aurelien Pupier

Abstract: A new release is made of new things! This will be an hopefully exhaustive lists of the new projects and main achievements that were part of Juno release.

What does E4 change for Eclipse developer

By:Mickael Istria

Abstract: E4 introduces new paradigms in Eclipse development (Dependency injection, modeled workbench, services...). In this presentation, you'll learn quickly what this new stuff provide and how to leverage it. You'll also see how it does (not) have impoact on what you already did, how to perform transition of your code from e3 to e4 without pain, and how to adopt these new efficient paradigms.

Abstract: This quickie show two products developed by the ESRF (in collaboration with DLS+EMBL) based on Eclipse. DAWN is a workbench for doing scientific data visualisation and analysis. Pogo is a code generator based on Xtext2 used for developing device servers in C++, Python and/or Java.